Imprisoned or locked up in jail as punishment for a crime.
From Latin 'incarcerare,' where 'in-' means 'in' and 'carcerare' comes from 'carcer' meaning 'prison.' The word literally means 'put in prison.'
The United States has the largest incarceration rate in the world—more people in prison per capita than almost any other nation, a fact that shaped criminal justice debates globally.
Women in carceral systems experience gender-specific violence, maternal separation, and reproductive control. The term 'incarcerated' obscures how the system differentially harms women, trans people, and people of color through medical neglect and sexual abuse.
Use 'incarcerated' accurately while centering documented harms. When discussing gender impacts, be specific about types of institutional violence.
["imprisoned","detained","in custody"]
Incarcerated women and trans people have led prison abolition and reform movements while experiencing systematic erasure from mainstream criminal justice discourse. Their leadership is foundational to liberation work.
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